Posts Tagged ‘spinal manipulation’

Can Chiropractic help with your headache? This study suggests so.

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Rupert Clements, one of the chiros at C1, writes:

A recent study snappily called:

Dose response and efficacy of spinal manipulation for chronic cervicogenic headache: a pilot randomized controlled trial

By Haas and co-workers was published in the uber serious Spine (The Spine Journal 2010; 10:117-128) which said that chiropractic was good at sorting out headaches.

As we all know, headaches are very common (with up to 16% of the population having one at any one time) and can very disabling (leading to work-days-lost, absenteeism costs and increased medical benefits spend).

Headaches are broken down into primary and secondary. The primary group is made up of:
• migraine,
• tension-type
and
• cervicogenic headache (CGH).

This last lot, CGH, account for a significant proportion of the 16% point estimate of those suffering primary headaches (but Nilson and Sjaastad have estimated the point to range from 0.4%-4.6%). Whatever. They are linked to neck pain and mechanical dysfunction and so, it is theorized, treating neck pain and mechanical dysfunction through manual therapies will help reduce headache symptoms.

headache woman 310x250 Can Chiropractic help with your headache?  This study suggests so.

Systematic reviews have been conducted on the usefulness of spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) in the treatment of CGH, however the treatment plans offer great variability: from once per week for three weeks to twice per week for 8 weeks. This, clearly, demonstrates a lack of clinical understanding and consensus in the research. This prevents us from being able to confidently set out the prognosis and expectations with respect to SMT.

The purpose of the study was to determine the efficacy of spinal manipulation in CGH and compare a high-dose and low-dose SMT application to a light massage.

One group received low-dose SMT (8 treatments), high-dose SMT (16 treatments), low-dose light massage (8 treatments) and high-dose light massage (16 treatments). The study showed some interesting things:

• While treatment dose had no effect on the use of medication, those receiving SMT used 1/3 less medication at 24 weeks.

• With respect to the number of cervicogenic headaches experienced, those receiving SMT experienced 2.6 fewer headaches per week compared to those receiving light massage.

• At the end of 24 weeks, those receiving SMT experienced 2.1 fewer ‘other’ headaches per week compared to those receiving light massage.

• While dose effects were small, those who received high-dose SMT experienced a greater improvement in neck pain (-5.9 at 12 wks; -10.6 at 24 wks)

• CGH pain, the number of headaches experienced per week and the amount of medication intake all reduced, with sustained reductions, favouring the SMT group.

• Lastly, by eight weeks, the number of weekly headaches was reduced 50% in those patients receiving SMT and on secondary analysis, a 50% reduction in symptoms (obtained via the outcome measures) was achieved in 80% of those receiving SMT.

The authors point out several key limitations to this study:
• The study design was highly complex and multifactorial.
• There was a small number of patients within each subgroup.
• Multiple headache classifications were present within many patients.

Interestingly, for us as chiros, there was no difference between the two dosages of SMT (though SMT proved to be more effective than light massage, irrespective of dosage.). And, as we’d expect, the differences between the SMT and the light massage group were not only statistically significant, but clinically significant as well.

This study is highly relevant and helpful to clinical practice as it strengthens the use of cervical spine manipulation in the treatment of CGH. It is also helpful as it demonstrates that patients do not tend to be cured by this intervention alone, indicating that CGH may require a combined intervention approach which includes exercise, soft-tissue therapy, spinal manipulation and education.

Can Chiropractic help with paediatric conditions?

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Chiropractors successfully treat a wide variety of paediatric health conditions. The evidence for this care rests primarily with clinical experience, descriptive case studies and very few observational and experimental studies. A good recent review done by two chiropractors examines this very elegantly. The review was done on the biomedical literature from January 2004 to June 2007 and it was designed to get a feel for the extent of new evidence about chiropractic manipulation for a wide range of paediatric health problems over that period. The review updated a similar, previous review published in 2005.

Tellingly, this systematic review concluded that:

1. There is no convincing evidence that spinal manipulation alone can affect the duration of infantile colic symptoms; (look a colon, you don’t see many of those about there days!)

2. The effect of spinal manipulation on sleep time, parental anxiety, quality of life and the number of infants meeting diagnostic criteria for colic could not be determined using available evidence;

3. The potential harm from the spinal manipulation of infants with colic could not be determined using evidence available from controlled trials.

There were also two trials carried out on enuresis one involving 171 children and the other 46 children. The first trial concluded the study results do not support the claim that chiropractic care in enuretic children is effective. However, the second trial concluded that the study results strongly suggest the effectiveness of chiropractic treatment for primary nocturnal enuresis!

There is a fair amount of evidence but it is clinically based and consists of 177 descriptive studies which are mainly single case reports and, so, interesting but not significant.

So we have some negative and a few positive results depending which way you are looking at the whole thing and what are we to make of it all?

The key thing is this: there is just not enough science out there to make a real judgement for and against and, as the chiropractic profession will freely and regularly admit, far more work is needed. Disappointingly the study added that there has been no “substantive shift in this body of knowledge during the past 3 1/2 years”. However it is worth bearing in mind that this is far from core business for the profession and far, far, more research is being carried on other subjects such as low-back pain in adults over the same period.

But if you are a practitioner who has numerous successful outcomes on single case basis you may arrive at some ‘premature’ conclusions and with some justification. However, generalizing such premature conclusions to larger patient populations is a position not well grounded in science and should be avoided if possible.

The health interests of paediatric patients would be advanced if more rigorous scientific inquiry was undertaken to examine the value of manipulative therapy in the treatment of paediatric conditions.
Let’s get it done.

Chiropractic manipulation in pediatric health conditions – an updated systematic review

Allan Gotlib and Ron Rupert
Canadian Chiropractic Association, CMCC Homewood Professor,
30 St. Patrick St. Suite 600, Toronto, Ontario, M5T 3A3, Canada
Parker College of Chiropractic, 2500 Walnut Hill Lane, Dallas, Texas 75229, USA

Are Chiropractors spinal health experts?

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Chronic low-back pain is the most expensive cause of pain and disability in working age adults. In the drug keen US of A in the eight years from 1997 – 2005 there was a 65% increase in spine care costs, with the biggest increase being in drugs which rose to a vast $19.8 billion – or an increase of 188%. In 2005 the total health bill for spine problems was over $85.9 billion or 9% of the total national US expenditure on health – only heart disease and stroke were more costly. However, at the same time as this increase in expenditure occurred the health status of the patients got worse with 1 in 4 patients with chronic low-back pain reporting physical limitations.

It is also pretty badly handled by the NHS, with the rush to surgery being far too fast and little to fill the gap between a fist full of pain-masking pills and a knife in your spine.

The great journal ‘The Spine Journal’ (Focus Issue on Chronic Low-back pain – 2008) suggested that “a reasonable approach to CLBP would include education strategies, simple analgesics, a brief course of manual therapy in the form of spinal manipulation, mobilization or massage, and possibly acupuncture”. All of this is provided by skilled practitioners in the clinic, C1 Chiropractic Health Centre.

The report also and adds, damningly, about the allopathic medicine providers: “there is clearly no consensus that commonly used diagnostic tests hold any value in the decision-making process before offering a treatment for CLBP” and this “brings into question the routine use of laboratory testing, x-rays, CT, MRI, discography, nerve conduction velocity and electromyography”.

All this is available on www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/15299430 – vol 8 issue 1.

So, who’s got the answers – clearly not the medics but I’d suggest the spinal health experts such as those at the clinic.